Sunderland Power Station was a coal-fired power station situated on the bank of the River Wear, in the city centre of Sunderland, in Tyne and Wear, North East England. The station operated into the 1970s,[1] but in October 1975, the Central Electricity Generating Board gave 12 months notification of the station's closure.[2] It finally closed on 25 October 1976, with a generating capacity of 34 megawatts.[3] The station was then demolished in 1979.[4] The cooling tower in particular was demolished in February of that year. The power station's site is now occupied by a PC World outlet.[5]
In 1962 the station was featured in L. S. Lowry's painting of Sunderland's dockside. The painting is now in the collection of Sunderland Museum and Winter Gardens.[6]
References
External links
- Flickr - photos of the station's cooling tower demolition
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- Butterwick Moor
- Haswell Moor
- Kiln Pit Hill
- Lynemouth
- Royal Oak
- Barmoor South
- Green Rigg
- Kielder
- Moorsyde
- Ray Hill
- South Sharpley
- Steadings
- Teeswind North
- The Isles
- Todd Hill
- West Ancroft
- Wingates
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- Book:Electricity generation in North East England
- Category:Power stations in North East England
- Portal:Energy
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